A Perfect (Political) Storm
By Rhiannonw
- 1130 reads
Battered from the right,
battered from the left,
the politician stood his ground
uncomfortably squeezed in a narrow cleft
he knew his reasoning was sound,
and wouldn’t be budged,
frightened or nudged,
but said what he knew was true
(refreshing view);
the perfect storm whirled round, attacked,
slander and mockery, no thought to fact,
and no-one would listen and analyse
to see what was worthless, popular lies
… until the storm moved on to find
another victim it could scorn and grind …
then a few stopped to ask the tired man
why he said what he did,
they gave thought, and saw
a better way ahead,
a folly they’d not seen,
a pitfall in their chosen path,
a better, safer plan.
This is not written with any person or current situation particularly in mind!
[IP: Perfect Storm]
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Comments
it was interesting Ruth
it was interesting Ruth Davisdon saying she didn't want to be prime minister. I wonder if Mrs May wishes her childhood ambition had not come true. No way out and so many watching. It is hard to see how anyone can sort things out. You have great empathy looking at it from a politician's point of view
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Perfect Storm
Hi Rhiannon... Poor guy, or woman - as the case may be. Like us, our politicians are stumbling through a fog of lies and misinterpretations. It gets to them in the end. Watch them on programmes like Question Time. They just sit there mumbling piffle and drivel. When you think about it, it's impossible for any country to be run by such headbangers. So we must be herded by lifetime, unelected, Civil Servants who will one day be replaced by robots.
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